Too much of continent? How much damage do you think the incidents so far have done?
That's difficult to assess, isn't it?
a) Chernobyl sprayed radioactive traces far and wide - with surprising levels in Scandinavia, Schottland... You can't really put in numbers the damage done, as it is a statistical function. Few deaths can be attributed directly outside the region, due to lack of measurable evidence, but they are surely non-zero.
b) Think also of how much future accidents might spread: It obviously depends on location and current wind patterns. I recently saw simulations of what might happen if the Belgian reactor at Tihange blows up, given a variety of actual, historical weather patterns. Damage could remain within a small region (but be extremely severe there), it could spread out to one or more of four neighbouring countries, it could lay waste to population centers and economic power regions with millions of inhabitants - and in some cases, it could affect a narrow but extremely long strip stretching all the way across Poland into Russia and the Baltic states.
I really dislike this sort of thinking. Generating energy on a large scale is inherently dangerous. Hydro and coal and nuclear are not exceptions. They all carry risks and we have to accept them if we want to have electrical power for millions. Nuclear isn't an evil, nor is it temporary. It's part of a long line of electricity technologies and will possibly stick around for centuries or more.
I'd agree that nuclear is not worse and perhaps better than coal, on balance, but it has far greater, and more far-reaching, impact than the others.
One aspect not yet looked into is the problem of military use. Proliferation of nuclear arms is so much easier to control and enforce if there simply are
no civilian-use facilities - no mines, no enrichment, no reactors - that fuzzy the true intents of wannabe-Blofelds.